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NicPais83
Guest
I’ll be getting married here in the states myself in October, in a Nuptual Mass. We’re going to have one priest and two deacons. One of the deacons is my dad, so it’s important to me to have him receive the vows, as he married my sister, and baptized her children. Since the couple themselves are the ministers of the Sacrament of Marriage (in the Latin Church), there generally is no reason a deacon cannot act in this capacity. There aren’t very many Sacraments the deacon can actually perform, namely Baptism and Marriage, but in certain and extremely rare circumstances, these I believe can also be performed by laity.
You should understand that the deaconate is not in anyway new to the Latin (“Roman Catholic”) Church. The permanent deaconate kinda died out centuries ago, and the deaconate became a stepping-stone towards the priesthood. In the Extraordinary Form of the Mass, you will see a deacon, but most of the time this was a priest vesting as a deacon.
There tends to be a bit of an idea that the deaconate is the equivalent of a married priest, or that a deacon is the samething as a priest. These are wrong, as the deaconate and priesthood, while both clergy, serve two very different, but equally vital roles. The deacon is answerable to the bishop. He cannot Consecrate, but he has some vital functions to perform during the Consecration, especially in reference to the Chalice. It’s the deacon’s job, therefore to read the Gospel, to care for the Chalice, and the deacon should give out Communion with the priest, before considering EMHC’s.
You should understand that the deaconate is not in anyway new to the Latin (“Roman Catholic”) Church. The permanent deaconate kinda died out centuries ago, and the deaconate became a stepping-stone towards the priesthood. In the Extraordinary Form of the Mass, you will see a deacon, but most of the time this was a priest vesting as a deacon.
There tends to be a bit of an idea that the deaconate is the equivalent of a married priest, or that a deacon is the samething as a priest. These are wrong, as the deaconate and priesthood, while both clergy, serve two very different, but equally vital roles. The deacon is answerable to the bishop. He cannot Consecrate, but he has some vital functions to perform during the Consecration, especially in reference to the Chalice. It’s the deacon’s job, therefore to read the Gospel, to care for the Chalice, and the deacon should give out Communion with the priest, before considering EMHC’s.